Climate and Weather Today’s class • • • • Map projection leftovers Air pressure and winds Climate comparisons Weather: hurricanes Map projections • Project a round globe onto a flat surface • • • • Options? Stretch out some areas Cut out some areas Shrink some areas Map projections • Three properties to consider – Area (equal-area or equivalent) – Shape (conformal) – Distance (equidistant) – Choose two out of three • How large an area? • Purpose of the map • Ulterior motives? Cylindrical projections • • • • Shapes are preserved But not area! Mercator projection Deliberate distortion? – Cold War – Colonialism Cylindrical projections: Gall- Peters • Adjusting Mercator for a more “just” map • Also preserves area • Distorts shape differently Conic projections • Best for hemispheres or small regions • Area and shape only slightly distorted Planar projections • Equidistant; good for navigation • Only good for one hemisphere • Distorts area, not shape Other projections • Based on more complicated math • Interrupted, oval, combination Robinson Goode Dymaxion Air pressure and winds • • • • Air is a fluid Warmer air is less dense Air moves from dense to less dense conditions Ex.: Land-sea breezes Global air circulation • • • • Equator receives most insolation Hot air rises, heads towards poles Air becomes heavy and sinks at 30°N and S Plus the Coriolis effect • Warmer air “holds” more water • Low pressure=warm air=precipitation • High pressure=cold air=dry air Ocean currents • Follow same circular pattern (driven by wind) • Warm currents flow away from equator, pile up on eastern shores – Gulf Stream, Brazil • Cold currents flow towards equator, cause upwelling – Humboldt/Peru, California Climate classification • Temperature and precipitation • Köppen classification system • Nine types, plus highlands Climate classification • Form groups according to climate • Verify your answers • Look at South America: find a city or country with your climate (Humid continental and subarctic/tundra, use North America—why?) • Explain how insolation, global air circulation, altitude, and land/water proximity make your place have the climate that it does Weather: hurricanes • Start at low pressure centers • Warm air rises • Water evaporates with energy from sun • With condensation, energy is released